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Wolforth, Joan – Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 2012
This paper discusses issues regarding the validity and reliability of psychoeducational assessments provided to Disability Services Offices at Canadian Universities. Several vignettes illustrate some current issues and the potential consequences when university students are given less than thorough disability evaluations and ascribed diagnoses.…
Descriptors: Reliability, Validity, Learning Disabilities, College Students
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Cramer, Angelique O. J. – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2012
What is validity? A simple question but apparently one with many answers, as Paul Newton highlights in his review of the history of validity. The current definition of validity, as entertained in the 1999 "Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing" is indeed a consensus, one between the classical notion of attributes, and measures…
Descriptors: Validity, Educational Testing, Depression (Psychology), Psychology
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Berk, Ronald A. – Journal of Faculty Development, 2016
Recently, student outcomes have bubbled to the top of debates about how to evaluate teaching in community and liberal arts colleges, universities, and professional schools, but even more international attention has been riveted on how outcomes are being used to evaluate teachers and administrators K-12 (Harris, 2012; Rowen & Raudenbush, 2016;…
Descriptors: Value Added Models, Academic Achievement, Outcomes of Education, Teacher Evaluation
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Cakir, Mustafa – Education, 2012
The notion of validity in the social sciences is evolving and is influenced by philosophy of science, critiques of objectivity, and epistemological debates. Methodology for validation of the knowledge claims is diverse across different philosophies of science. In other words, definition and the way to establish of validity have evolved as…
Descriptors: Validity, Social Sciences, Psychological Testing, Epistemology
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Newton, Paul E. – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2012
The 1999 "Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing" defines validity as the degree to which evidence and theory support the interpretations of test scores entailed by proposed uses of tests. Although quite explicit, there are ways in which this definition lacks precision, consistency, and clarity. The history of validity has taught us…
Descriptors: Evidence, Validity, Educational Testing, Risk
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Zane, Thomas W. – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2009
Just as objectivist theories have provided foundations for traditional tests, constructivist theories can offer foundations for performance assessment design and development methods. The tenets and principles embedded in various learning theories provide a solid foundation that can be combined with psychometric principles to help assessment…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Performance Based Assessment, Performance Tests, Psychometrics
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Brown, Robert T.; Reynolds, Cecil R.; Whitaker, Jean S. – School Psychology Quarterly, 1999
Summarizes the major conclusions from "Bias in Mental Testing" (BIMT) published in 1980, and evaluates writing on test bias published since BIMT. Results show that empirical research to date consistently finds that standardized cognitive tests are not biased in terms of predictive and construct validity. (Author/MKA)
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Mass Media Effects, Psychological Testing, Standardized Tests
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Blanton, Hart; Jaccard, James – American Psychologist, 2006
Reducing the arbitrariness of a metric is distinct from the pursuit of validity, rational zero points, data transformations, standardization, and the types of statistical procedures one uses to analyze interval-level versus ordinal-level data. A variety of theoretical, methodological, and statistical tools can assist researchers who wish to make…
Descriptors: Psychological Testing, Item Response Theory, Psychometrics, Validity